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This is a list of bus routes in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. Winnipeg Transit provides public bus service to the city of Winnipeg, operating 90 bus routes, [1] 4 On-Request services and 5,167 bus stops [2] as of September 2024. Many routes on this list have more than one ultimate destination, even on trips travelling in the same direction.
Winnipeg Transit. Winnipeg Transit is the public transit agency, and the bus -service provider, of the City of Winnipeg, Manitoba. Established 141 years ago, it is owned by the city government and currently employs nearly 1,600 people—including approximately 1,100 bus drivers. [3]
Winnipeg Rapid Transit is a bus rapid transit system of Winnipeg Transit in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, currently consisting of the Southwest Transitway. Future expansions are in the planning stages, consisting of an Eastern Corridor connecting downtown to Transcona and a West-North Corridor connecting St. James with Downtown and West Kildonan.
Transport in Winnipeg involves various transportation systems, including both private and public services, and modes of transport in the capital city of Manitoba.. According to Statistics Canada, in 2011, the dominant form of travel in Winnipeg was by car as a driver (69%), followed by commute trips using public transit (15%), as a car passenger (7%), walking (6%), bicycle (2%), and other ...
These roads are high capacity limited-access roads serving the city. The speed limit is mainly 60 to 100 km/h (35 to 60 mph). Concurrent with PTH 59 for entire length. Formerly part of PTH 7 north of Portage Ave; formerly part of PTH 6 north of Logan Ave (PTH 6 / PTH 7 concurrency between Logan Ave and present-day PTH 101).
Winnipeg City Routes. ← Route 90. → Route 96. Route 95 is a city route located in Winnipeg, Manitoba. It runs in the southwest part of the city from Route 105 east to Route 42, near the Confusion Corner intersection. It is named Roblin Boulevard west of Assiniboine Park, where it then becomes Corydon Avenue for the remainder of its route.
The Graham Avenue Transit Mall is a 9-block transit mall in downtown Winnipeg that is mostly reserved for Winnipeg Transit buses, as well as cyclists and pedestrians. [1] [2] Having been in the planning stages since the 1970s, Graham Mall was completed in 1995. [1] Today, the Mall sees 1,800 buses and 100,000 transit users every day.
In December 1962 plans were announced to replace the old Union Bus Depot between Hargrave and Carlton St. to the Winnipeg Bus Terminal fronted on Portage Avenue between Colony and Balmoral Streets and be named the Mall Centre. The project on 2.5 acres (1.0 ha) of land would cost $4.5 million and would include a parkade and a 7-storey office ...